napari.qt.threading.GeneratorWorker#

class napari.qt.threading.GeneratorWorker(func: ~typing.Callable[[~_P], ~typing.Generator[~superqt.utils._qthreading._Y, ~superqt.utils._qthreading._S | None, ~superqt.utils._qthreading._R]], *args, SignalsClass: type[~superqt.utils._qthreading.WorkerBaseSignals] = <class 'superqt.utils._qthreading.GeneratorWorkerSignals'>, **kwargs)[source]#

Bases: GeneratorWorker[_Y, _S, _R], _NotifyingMixin

Methods

autoDelete(self)

await_workers([msecs])

Ask all workers to quit, and wait up to msec for quit.

pause()

Request to pause the worker.

quit()

Send a request to abort the worker.

resume()

Send a request to resume the worker.

run()

Start the worker.

send(value)

Send a value into the function (if a generator was used).

setAutoDelete(self, _autoDelete)

start()

Start this worker in a thread and add it to the global threadpool.

toggle_pause()

Request to pause the worker if playing or resume if paused.

work()

Core event loop that calls the original function.

Attributes

abort_requested

Whether the worker has been requested to stop.

is_paused

Whether the worker is currently paused.

is_running

Whether the worker has been started.

Details

property abort_requested: bool#

Whether the worker has been requested to stop.

autoDelete(self) bool#
classmethod await_workers(msecs: int | None = None) None#

Ask all workers to quit, and wait up to msec for quit.

Attempts to clean up all running workers by calling worker.quit() method. Any workers in the WorkerBase._worker_set set will have this method.

By default, this function will block indefinitely, until worker threads finish. If a timeout is provided, a RuntimeError will be raised if the workers do not gracefully exit in the time requests, but the threads will NOT be killed. It is (currently) left to the user to use their OS to force-quit rogue threads.

!!! important

If the user does not put any yields in their function, and the function is super long, it will just hang… For instance, there’s no graceful way to kill this thread in python:

```python @thread_worker def ZZZzzz():

time.sleep(10000000)

```

This is why it’s always advisable to use a generator that periodically yields for long-running computations in another thread.

See [this stack-overflow post](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/323972/is-there-any-way-to-kill-a-thread) for a good discussion on the difficulty of killing a rogue python thread:

Parameters:

msecs (int, optional) – Waits up to msecs milliseconds for all threads to exit and removes all threads from the thread pool. If msecs is None (the default), the timeout is ignored (waits for the last thread to exit).

Raises:

RuntimeError – If a timeout is provided and workers do not quit successfully within the time allotted.

property is_paused: bool#

Whether the worker is currently paused.

property is_running: bool#

Whether the worker has been started.

pause() None[source]#

Request to pause the worker.

quit() None#

Send a request to abort the worker.

!!! note

It is entirely up to subclasses to honor this method by checking self.abort_requested periodically in their worker.work method, and exiting if True.

resume() None[source]#

Send a request to resume the worker.

run() None#

Start the worker.

The end-user should never need to call this function. But it cannot be made private or renamed, since it is called by Qt.

The order of method calls when starting a worker is:

```

calls QThreadPool.globalInstance().start(worker) | triggered by the QThreadPool.start() method | | called by worker.run | | | V V V worker.start -> worker.run -> worker.work

```

This is the function that actually gets called when calling QThreadPool.start(worker). It simply wraps the work() method, and emits a few signals. Subclasses should NOT override this method (except with good reason), and instead should implement work().

send(value: _S)[source]#

Send a value into the function (if a generator was used).

setAutoDelete(self, _autoDelete: bool) None#
start() None#

Start this worker in a thread and add it to the global threadpool.

The order of method calls when starting a worker is:

```

calls QThreadPool.globalInstance().start(worker) | triggered by the QThreadPool.start() method | | called by worker.run | | | V V V worker.start -> worker.run -> worker.work

```

toggle_pause() None[source]#

Request to pause the worker if playing or resume if paused.

work() _R | None | Exception[source]#

Core event loop that calls the original function.

Enters a continual loop, yielding and returning from the original function. Checks for various events (quit, pause, resume, etc…). (To clarify: we are creating a rudimentary event loop here because there IS NO Qt event loop running in the other thread to hook into)